- WarnerMedia didn’t have the best quarter (The Hollywood Reporter)
- …But on the bright side, HBO Max now has more than 28 million subscribers (The Verge)
- Quibi is officially shutting down, and with it goes US$2 billion in major Hollywood investment (Variety)
- Macmillan is shutting down it’s children’s publishing imprint (Book Stacked)
- Netflix’s COVID bump has slowed; its Q3 subs and earnings missed the mark slightly (Variety)
- Even as most movie releases move to SVOD, Disney preps its next big animated epic for March (Polygon)
- A conversation about race and diversity in eSports (ESPN)
- Politicians are hopping on the Among Us bandwagon, drawing huge crowds (The Verge)
- The producer behind the Master Moley TV series has a message for creatives: Get investors before going to broadcasters (Evening Standard)
- Netflix has been having a great 2020…but 2021 is going to be a tough one (CNN Business)
- Is Disney’s quick pivot to streaming a sign that the worst is yet to come for the House of Mouse? (The Conversation)
- New research shows that less than 2% of writers in British TV are Black (The Guardian)
- Forget in-flight entertainment—WarnerMedia is prepping more in-car options (Variety)
- YouTube’s biggest kids show, Cocomelon, is about to take over streaming services (The Verge)
- Children are driving a boom in smart speakers, using them more during the pandemic than ever before (The Guardian)
- Disney+ has added warnings about racist stereotypes to some of its older films (New York Times)
- China’s box office hit US$2 billion this year, overtaking North America’s (Variety)
- The UK’s insurance scheme for live-action TV and film production during the pandemic is now live (Variety)
- Why Africa’s animation scene is booming right now (BBC News)
- NBCU’s Peacock came out on top in September, capturing 17% of all new SVOD subscribers (Digital TV Europe)
- As Disney focuses more on streaming than ever before, why is Hulu being sidelined? (BNN Bloomberg)
- The next generation of gaming has become an environmental nightmare (WIRED)
- A new report on streaming warns that Disney+ could “lose momentum” (Fast Company)
- Why kids and teens are flocking to the computer game Among Us (The New York Times)
- Natalie Portman has written a children’s book that puts a modern twist on classic tales (Romper)
- Teachers and parents are finding new ways to keep kids playing as they learn online (CBC)
- Disney’s shift to focus on streaming has left investors happy, but insiders baffled (Variety)
- Ireland is countering the pandemic by doubling Screen Ireland’s budget to support new content (Deadline)
- …But over in Australia, kids producers warn that their sector could collapse (TBI)
- Netflix is dropping free trials in the US and looking at new marketing strategies (Tubefilter)
- Universal Studios has laid off more than 800 employees as the pandemic hits theme parks hard (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Ted Sarandos says Netflix plans on releasing six original animated features annually (Variety)
- The world’s largest movie theater chain could run out of cash by the end of the year if filmgoers don’t show up (Financial Times)
- California’s governor is sending a team to Florida to see if Disneyland can reopen (The Hollywood Reporter)
- How a location-tracking techco is embracing teens and connecting with them on TikTok (Tech Crunch)
- WarnerMedia plans to cut thousands of jobs, but for now it seems like kids and animation will be spared (Wall Street Journal)
- Pixar is skipping movie theaters this Christmas and putting its newest film Soul on Disney+ (CNBC)
- Is there really a “back to normal” for live events, or are there too many obstacles in the way? (The Hollywood Reporter)
- A trend is starting to emerge: Netflix doesn’t really pick up originals for more than three seasons (Vulture)
- France has passed a new law to protect child influencers, regulating hours and earnings (BBC News)
- How Rebecca Sugar pulled off that very special Steven Universe wedding (Vulture)
- Beep beep! Drive-in movie releases are now eligible for the Oscars (Variety)
- To keep each other afloat, retailers Target and FAO Schwarz are partnering on an exclusive toy line (Yahoo Finance)
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